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Is a 92-year-old Prime Minister the right choice for Malaysia?

Is a 92 year old PM the right choice for Malaysia?

  • Yes

    Votes: 3 25.0%
  • No

    Votes: 7 58.3%
  • Don't know

    Votes: 2 16.7%

  • Total voters
    12

DeadBall

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At 92, Mahathir Mohamad begins second innings as Malaysian Prime Minister

Ninety-two-year-old Mahathir Mohamad was Thursday sworn in as the world's oldest elected leader after a stunning election win that swept Malaysia's establishment from power after more than six decades.

In a huge political upset, former strongman Mr. Mahathir's opposition alliance broke the grip on power of the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition, which had governed Malaysia uninterrupted since its birth as an independent country in 1957.

It capped a dramatic political comeback for Mr. Mahathir, who previously ruled the country with an iron fist for 22 years and came out of retirement to take on Prime Minister Najib Razak after the leader became embroiled in a massive corruption scandal.

In a ceremony at the national palace steeped in centuries-old Muslim Malay tradition, Mr. Mahathir was officially sworn in as Prime Minister by King Sultan Muhammad V.

Mr. Mahathir, dressed in traditional Malay dress, took the oath of office in a elaborately decorated room, with political allies and senior government officials in attendance.

“I, Mahathir Mohamad, after being elected as prime minister, swear to carry out my task with all my ability, and that I will be loyal to Malaysia and preserve and defend the constitution,” he said.

As he was sworn in, fireworks lit up in the night sky across Kuala Lumpur as people celebrated.

Earlier, Mr. Mahathir and his wife Siti Hasmah Mohamad Ali were driven into the palace past hundreds of well-wishers waving flags and chanting the national anthem.

Mohamad Azlan Shah, a member of Mr. Mahathir's party in the crowd, said he was “very proud”.

“Our struggle to change Malaysian politics is not wasted. We believe Mahathir can make a change,” he told AFP.

One of the most remarkable aspects of Mr. Mahathir's comeback has been his reconciliation with jailed opposition icon Anwar Ibrahim, his former nemesis. Their relationship has loomed large over the Malaysian political landscape for decades.

Mr. Anwar was Mahathir's heir-apparent until the premier sacked him in 1998 over political differences, and he was subsequently jailed on charges of sodomy and abuse of power.

Mr. Anwar was jailed again during Najib's rule but is due out in June -- and Mahathir has pledged to help him get a royal pardon, allowing him to run for political office again and potentially become prime minister.


As it became clear that BN was facing a historic wipeout, Mr. Najib disappeared for hours and only surfaced Thursday morning to tell a press conference that he accepted the people's will, although he stopped short of conceding defeat.

His comments were slammed by one analyst as “unstatesmanlike”.

The Opposition's shock victory triggered euphoria and a sense of relief that a leader who was accused of massive graft and fanning racial tensions in the multi-ethnic country was finally on his way out.

“We have been waiting for so long for this to happen,” Larson Michael, 35, a voter from just outside Kuala Lumpur, told AFP.

“(Mahathir) has come back to help us regain the country. Now we want to see if he will fulfil... his promises.”

The initial delight at the opposition victory will likely give way to some apprehension. Mr. Mahathir was also accused of being an authoritarian leader, and political opponents were thrown in jail during his time in office.

The opposition faced an uphill battle at the election due to what critics said were no-holds-barred attempts by Najib to hang on to power.

His government was accused of gerrymandering while activists said he hurled cash and gifts at voters and there was a litany of problems with the electoral roll, including dead people appearing on the list.

In the event, voters turned out in droves across the country in a determined bid to oust Mr. Najib.

Mr. Najib's defeat could be just the start of his problems — Mr. Mahathir has vowed to bring him to justice over allegations that billions of dollars were looted from sovereign wealth fund 1MDB, which the scandal-hit leader set up and oversaw.

In Mr. Mahathir, the opposition found the perfect person to take on Mr. Najib. He is a staunch Malay nationalist who could appeal to the country's biggest ethnic group, and whose years in power were remembered as a prosperous period in the country's history.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/intern...gins-second-innings-at-92/article23839936.ece
 
Why does his age matter? If Roosevelt could rule from a wheelchair, can't see any problem here
 
Mahatir showed that any nation only needs one man to turn it around and make her stand on her feet. Not sure how effective an administrator he would be at 92 years of age. I think it is the nostalgia amongst the general population regarding his rule that helped him rise to power again.



Imran Khan is deeply inspired by Mahatir and often references him in his discussions. I hope IK gets a chance to turn our country around like Mahatir did with his.
 
Why does his age matter? If Roosevelt could rule from a wheelchair, can't see any problem here

Senility for one. One can't really compare a physical handicap with a mental one.
 
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Yes it is. If those who voted for him have no problem then neither should anyone else.
 
Considering who their last PM was, even a pink baboon would be a good alternative for them right now.
 
Malaysia's king has agreed to pardon a politician whose case has gripped national politics for two decades, says new PM Mahathir Mohamad.

Anwar Ibrahim, once considered a potential future leader, was jailed on charges of corruption and sodomy after falling out with the government.

But Mr Mahathir, the PM under which he was first jailed, just won an election on a pledge of freeing him.

He has indicated he will hand power to Anwar within a few years.

At a news conference on Friday - a day after his historic election win - Mr Mahathir said the king "has indicated he is willing to pardon Datuk Seri Anwar immediately", using an honorific title.

"It is going to be a full pardon which of course means that he should not only be pardoned, he should be released immediately when he is pardoned. After that he will be free to participate fully in politics."

Mr Mahathir's election win, at the head of the Pakatan Harapan, ended more than six decades of rule by the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition.

Both he and Anwar were formerly in power, as part of the BN, as prime minister and deputy respectively. The story of their relationship is one of extraordinary twists and turns.

Anwar was sacked in 1998 after a dispute with the coalition leadership and then led huge protests against Mr Mahathir's government. He was jailed a year later for abuse of power.

Then in 2000 he was convicted of sodomy, and given an additional nine-year-term.

Though sodomy is illegal in conservative Muslim Malaysia people are seldom convicted for it, so his case was widely seen as an attempt by the government to remove a political threat.

In 2004 his conviction was overturned and he led the opposition to unprecedented gains - though not victory - in the 2008 and 2013 general elections.

But that acquittal was itself overturned a year later - as he was preparing to fight a state election he seemed likely to win - and he was sent back to jail.

In a shock turn of events earlier this year, his former nemesis Mahathir Mohamad announced he was going to be running for the top office again.

He said he was sick of the corruption allegations plaguing the incumbent Najib Razak, another of Mr Mahathir's former allies.

Anwar has remained popular with opposition supporters, and a condition of Mr Mahathir being allowed to lead the coalition was that he agreed to secure a royal pardon.

He agreed, and further said he aimed to hand the prime minister post to Anwar within two years.

It remains unclear when the pardon will be issued, and Mr Mahathir warned his supporters that the process of Anwar becoming an MP again so he can take on the leadership "might take a long time".

Some have likened the twists and turns of Malaysian politics to a plot by Shakespeare. Mahathir Mohamad, the autocratic strongman who turned on his chosen successor Anwar Ibrahim, is now allied with him and seeking his release, having deposed Najib Razak, another one-time Mahathir protégé.

During the bitter election, Mr Najib called the alliance a "coalition of convenience" which, he warned, would fall apart if they won.

There are many strong personalities in the victorious coalition which will have to be reconciled, but none more important than Anwar and Mr Mahathir, who until his defection to the opposition, still described Anwar as morally unfit to lead the country.

Will the famously devious Mr Mahathir keep his word? Everything he says suggests he will. He keeps repeating the pledge to push for a pardon, and to step aside for Anwar.

Even with his remarkable fitness, he must, at 92 years old, consider his physical limitations. They're in coalition, but with only 13 seats in parliament Mr Mahathir's new party Bersatu is much smaller than Anwar's Keadilan, with 47. The days where Mr Mahathir could dictate his terms are probably over.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-44079211
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">First day on the job... once again. <a href="https://t.co/Oxe3E8OEuU">pic.twitter.com/Oxe3E8OEuU</a></p>— Dr Mahathir Mohamad (@chedetofficial) <a href="https://twitter.com/chedetofficial/status/994832602816278529?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 11, 2018</a></blockquote>
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Sindh province survived through a 93 years old CM, Malaysia will be OK too.
 
Malaysians usher in a new era as they usher out the ruling coalition
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Malaysians woke up Thursday to an unexpected new world of possibilities. Despite manipulating the electoral process, attempting to muzzle critics with a “fake news” law and stoking racial and religious divisions, Prime Minister Najib Razak lost Wednesday's election, as Malaysian voters ousted the ruling coalition for the first since time since the country's independence from Britain.

The new prime minister, Mahathir Mohamad, is no radical political outsider. The 92-year-old ran the country from 1981 to 2003, was often accused of limiting Malaysian democracy and joined the opposition coalition — Pakatan Harapan, or Alliance of Hope — only last year.

His supporters hope Mahathir's government will be less autocratic than Najib's and less reliant on sectarian appeals to Malay Muslim identity. But even if it doesn't turn out that way, most analysts and citizens agree that something important happened Wednesday. Voters proved, for the first time, that they can make a difference by showing up, and that democracy is still alive and kicking in Asia.

“I'm very happy with this result. But I'm also a bit scared,” said Shariza Binti Zolkeple, a 25-year-old Muslim Malay fashion designer waiting for Mahathir to be sworn in Thursday. “After six decades with the Barisan Nasional [National Front] in power, many people will be unhappy, and we don't know what will happen.”

The surprising result is rare good news for supporters of liberal democracy elsewhere around Southeast Asia, a region that has mostly been lurching toward autocracy, violence and religious fundamentalism in recent years. In the Philippines, President Rodrigo Duterte has overseen a “war on drugs” that has taken thousands of lives, as well as a press crackdown. Indonesia, Southeast Asia's largest country, has taken steps toward Islamic conservatism, and Burma (also known as Myanmar) has been host to an explosion of anti-Muslim violence.

“This shows that the pendulum can swing back from authoritarianism,” said Bridget Welsh, a professor of political science and Malaysia specialist at John Cabot University in Italy. “Corruption scandals and Najib's ostentatious wealth flew in the face of ordinary people struggling to make ends meet — and unlike in the last election, they had somewhere else to go, a former premier who while not uncontroversial is known by the public.”

Even the less-than-level playing field during the campaign couldn't stop them. “All the cheating was overpowered by a tsunami of voters,” she said.

Malaysia is a constitutional monarchy modeled on the British parliamentary system, with the throne rotated among nine royal families from the ethnic Malay population, who are constitutionally defined as Muslims and make up about 60 percent of the country.

Late on Thursday, Sultan Muhammad V swore in Mahathir after hours of delay that led to speculation that Najib might be mounting a last-ditch effort to hold on to power. Mahathir says he does not want to govern for long and will work to pardon former deputy Anwar Ibrahim, who beat Najib in the popular vote in 2013 but failed to win enough of the parliamentary positions that matter in the Malaysian system, and then was jailed on sodomy charges he calls politically motivated. The Alliance of Hope won far more than the 112 seats needed to form a majority Wednesday, and if all goes according to plan, Anwar could take power within a year or two and emphasize social justice and anti-corruption.

In Mahathir's campaign, he promised to restore national pride and said that the world has been calling Najib a “crook,” a blow that lands especially hard due to accusations of large-scale malfeasance at the 1MDB state investment fund, which is being investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice and authorities in at least five other countries. Najib largely responded to these challenges by cracking down on free expression and jumping on the electoral scales to try to tip them in his favor.

Although Malaysia was never a bastion of free speech, Najib's government passed a controversial “fake news” law this year that was widely seen as a way to limit criticism before campaigning started. Perhaps predictably, Mahathir was soon targeted by the law. Malaysia's electoral commission also redrew the country's districts in an aggressive gerrymandering exercise that clearly benefited Najib, and the government even temporarily dissolved Mahathir's party in April.

On top of all that, Najib, who briefly supported a criminal code based on Islamic sharia law, also played the race card. In addition to the Malay majority, the country is home to large ethnic Chinese and Tamil-speaking minority populations, who are mostly non-Muslim and therefore exempt from religious law. As the Alliance of Hope includes the Chinese-majority Democratic Action Party (DAP), Najib warned that the country could be dominated by the Chinese.

In Southeast Asia, ethnic Chinese minorities have been subjected to official political exclusion or even racial violence when leaders accuse them of being rich outsiders with undue influence. The DAP has never taken part in a national government.

But it couldn't sway the voters for Najib. On Friday, Malaysians will wake up for the first time with the National Front out of power and with the knowledge that they can vote out this new group of leaders, too, if they don't like the way things go.

“The great tragedy in Malaysia is that it has one of the most sophisticated democracies in Southeast Asia but that over the years these institutions had withered on the vine due to machine politics,” said Michael Vatikiotis, the Asia regional director at the Geneva-based Center for Humanitarian Dialogue, who said that recent developments elsewhere in Asia prove that democratic success stories can easily be undone. “We must and should celebrate the triumph of these Malaysian democratic institutions, but we should not be naive about the real threats that lie ahead.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/amphtml/news/worldviews/wp/2018/05/10/malaysians-usher-in-a-new-era-as-they-usher-out-the-ruling-coalition/?noredirect=on&__twitter_impression=true
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">My prayers and good wishes go to my friend Dr Mahathir Mohamad for his speedy recovery.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1486270450305011722?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 26, 2022</a></blockquote>
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Malaysia’s veteran politician Mahathir loses seat in first election defeat in 53 years

Mahathir Mohamad, the 97-year-old elder statesman of Malaysian politics, lost his parliamentary seat in Saturday’s polls, likely ending the career of one of Asia’s most enduring politicians.

Mahathir came in fourth in a five-way fight in his long-held constituency in the holiday resort island of Langkawi, the country’s election commission said.

It was his first electoral defeat in more than half a century.

Mahathir held the Guinness World Record for being the “world’s oldest current prime minister” when he became premier for a second time in 2018 just two months shy of his 93rd birthday.

Visibly slowed by age but still looking healthy, he ran this time around under his own Homeland Fighters’ Party and had laughed off suggestions he should retire, telling reporters before the election he had a “good chance” of winning.

“I’m still standing around and talking to you, I think, making reasonable answers,” Mahathir said.

He added his party would not form any alliances with parties that are led by “crooks or jailbirds” — an apparent reference to the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), the party of jailed former prime minister Najib Razak.

‘Mahathir’s time has passed’

Mahathir has been criticised for ruling the Southeast Asian nation with an iron fist from 1981 to 2003 but is also hailed for helping transform the country from a sleepy backwater into one of the world’s top exporters of high-tech goods.

Mahathir’s long leadership provided political stability and he gained the title of “Father of Modern Malaysia” as he oversaw the construction of highways and industrial parks in the 1980s and 1990s.

He came out of his 15-year retirement to lead the opposition Pakatan Harapan (Alliance of Hope) coalition in the 2018 polls amid voter anger over then-incumbent Najib’s role in the massive financial scandal at state fund 1MDB.

The reformist bloc won a stunning victory over UMNO and Najib, who was later convicted of corruption and is currently serving a 12-year jail sentence. Mahathir became premier again but his government collapsed in less than two years due to infighting.

He has warned that Najib would be freed if the jailed politician’s allies in UMNO win.

He also offered to become prime minister a third time, but observers said he had no chance from the beginning.

His titanic clashes with opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, his erstwhile heir-in-apparent with whom he had a bitter falling out, have dominated and shaped Malaysian politics over the past two decades.

In the end, age was his biggest opponent.

“Mahathir’s time has passed,” Bridget Welsh of the University of Nottingham Malaysia told AFP earlier this month ahead of the election.

DAWN
 
Malaysia's Anwar becomes prime minister, ending decades-long wait

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 24 (Reuters) - Malaysia's Anwar Ibrahim was sworn in as prime minister on Thursday, capping a three-decade political journey from a protege of veteran leader Mahathir Mohamad to protest leader, a prisoner convicted of sodomy and opposition leader.

Anwar, 75, vowed to fight corruption and to focus on the economy while also upholding Islam as the official religion of the multi-ethnic country and defending special rights of ethnic Malays.

"Thank God, because we have seen a change that has awaited the people of Malaysia," Anwar told reporters at a late-evening address, hours after he was sworn in by the king who appointed him after an inconclusive election.

"We will never compromise on good governance, the anti-corruption drive, judicial independence and the welfare of ordinary Malaysians," he said before leading chants of "Reformasi" - his rallying cry for reform during years of opposition.

His appointment ends five days of unprecedented post-election crisis, but could usher in further instability with his rival, former prime minister Muhyiddin Yassin, challenging him to prove his majority in parliament.

Both men's coalitions failed to win a majority in a Saturday election, but Malaysia's constitutional monarch, King Al-Sultan Abdullah, appointed Anwar after speaking to several lawmakers.

CHALLENGING TIME

Anwar takes over at a challenging time, with the economy slowing and the country divided after a tight election.

The campaign pitted Anwar's progressive, multi-ethnic coalition against Muhyiddin's mostly conservative ethnic-Malay, Muslim alliance.

Markets surged on the end of political deadlock. The ringgit currency posted its best day in two weeks and equities (.KLSE) rose 3%.

Anwar had time and again been denied the premiership despite getting within striking distance over the years: he was deputy prime minister in the 1990s and the official prime minister-in-waiting in 2018.

In between, he spent nearly a decade in jail for sodomy and corruption in what he says were politically motivated charges aimed at ending his career.

The uncertainty over the election threatened to prolong political instability in the Southeast Asian country, which has had three prime ministers in as many years, and risks delaying policy decisions needed to foster economic recovery.

Anwar's supporters expressed hope that his government would avert a return to historic tensions between the ethnic Malay, Muslim majority and ethnic Chinese and Indian minorities.

"All we want is moderation for Malaysia, and Anwar represents that," said a communications manager in Kuala Lumpur, who asked to be identified by her surname Tang.

"We can't have a country that is divided by race and religion as that will set us back another 10 years."

Anwar's coalition, known as Pakatan Harapan, won the most seats in Saturday's vote with 82, while Muhyiddin's Perikatan Nasional bloc won 73. They needed 112 - a simple majority - to form a government.

The long-ruling Barisan bloc won only 30 seats - the worst electoral performance for a coalition that had dominated politics since independence in 1957.

Barisan said on Thursday it would not support a government led by Muhyiddin, though it made no reference to Anwar.

TENSIONS

Muhyiddin's bloc includes the Islamist party PAS, whose electoral gains raised concern within the ethnic Chinese and Indian communities, most of whose members follow other faiths.

Authorities warned after the weekend vote of a rise in ethnic tension on social media and short video platform TikTok said it was on high alert for content that violated its guidelines.

Social media users reported numerous TikTok posts since the election that mentioned a riot in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, on May 13, 1969, in which about 200 people were killed, days after opposition parties supported by ethnic Chinese voters made inroads in an election.

The decision on the prime minister came down to King Al-Sultan Abdullah, after both Anwar and Muhyiddin missed his Tuesday afternoon deadline to put together a ruling alliance.

The king plays a largely ceremonial role but can appoint a premier he believes will command a majority in parliament.

Malaysia has a unique constitutional monarchy in which kings are chosen in turn from the royal families of nine states to reign for a five-year term.

The most immediate issue facing Anwar will be the budget for next year, which was proposed before the election was called but has yet to be passed.

Anwar will also have to negotiate agreements with lawmakers from other blocs to ensure he can retain majority support in parliament.

"Anwar is appointed at a critical juncture in Malaysian history, where politics is most fractured, recovering from a depressed economy and a bitter COVID memory," said James Chai, visiting fellow at ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore.

"Always regarded as the man who could unite all warring factions, it is fitting that Anwar emerged during a divisive time."

Reuters
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Belated felicitations to my dear friend <a href="https://twitter.com/anwaribrahim?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@anwaribrahim</a> on becoming PM of Malaysia. My old school motto Perseverance Commands Success seems most appropriate for all your struggles. I wish you the very best of success in all your endeavours as Prime Minister.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1603378589293891584?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 15, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
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